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Ipswich Town 1-0 Gillingham - Match Report
Saturday, 5th Feb 2022 17:03

Conor Chaplin’s ninth goal of the season saw Town to a 1-0 victory over Gillingham at Portman Road, maintaining manager Kieran McKenna’s 100 per cent home record. The Gills had hit the woodwork twice before Chaplin’s low strike in the 74th minute with the Blues unconvincing for much of the afternoon.

Joe Pigott, Lee Evans, Tom Carroll and James Norwood returned to the Town starting line-up.

Pigott was making his first start since Kieran McKenna took over with Macauley Bonne dropping to the bench.

Norwood played off central striker Pigott to the left with Chaplin to the right with Bersant Celina on the bench and Sone Aluko not in the squad.

Evans was in central midfield after returning from a groin injury alongside Carroll, who missed last week’s 1-0 loss at Sheffield Wednesday after his partner gave birth. Tyreeq Bakinson was among the subs and Idris El Mizouni wasn’t in the 18, while Dominic Thompson was handed his home debut at left wing-back.

For the Gills under new manager Neil Harris, Gislingham-born Stuart O’Keefe, a one-time Town academy player, skippered.

The visitors struck the game’s first shot in the third minute, Danny Lloyd hitting a low free-kick from 25 yards which Christian Walton bundled away to his right.

But Town, with Ed Sheeran watching from his box in the Cobbold Stand alongside Olly Murs, soon took over, dominating possession but without threatening in the final third.

On 12, David Tutonda was shown the game’s first yellow card for a foul on Janoi Donacien as the right-sided centre-half ran onto a return pass. From the free-kick, Evans whipped a curling ball into the area just beyond Norwood and stand-in skipper George Edmundson was unable to direct it goalwards.

Town went closer two minutes later when Carroll sent over a corner from the right, Luke Woolfenden battled hard to nod back across goal and Pigott looped a header over when the striker, a former Gillingham loanee, will feel he ought to have done better.

As the game reached the 20-minute mark, the Blues had a couple of sloppy moments with Lloyd finding himself in a good position from the first before handling the ball. Soon after Lloyd under-hit a back pass towards Aaron Chapman but the keeper was out quickly to clear ahead of Pigott.

Town began to regain their earlier composure and might have gone ahead in the 27th minute. Wes Burns hit a low shot from the right which Chapman uncomfortably palmed into the path of Thompson breaking into the box at pace, but the on-loan Brentford man was unable to keep his first-time shot down.

The Blues were starting to look more threatening and on 29 Evans clipped a looping ball into the area which a defender diverted away from Norwood and Thompson at the far post. From the resultant corner, Edmundson headed over.


However, Town were far from in total control and on 34 Gillingham debutant Ben Thompson screwed a shot from 20 yards wide.

The Blues continued to have sloppy moments, giving the ball away in their own half too regularly but with Gillingham unable to force a serious chance.

On 43 the ball was cleverly worked in from the Town right but Carroll turned the ball in front of Norwood with the striker not expecting it.

The Blues were seeing plenty of the ball as the whistle blew for half-time but still without finding a way through a Gillingham side more organised and determined than they had been in the 4-0 Town win at the Priestfield Stadium last month.

Town had had the lion’s share of the possession - 71-29 according to the stats - but had been too sloppy, particularly in their own half with passes having gone astray in potentially dangerous areas. However, neither Walton nor Gills keeper Chapman had had a particularly busy half.

The Blues started the second half on the front foot with a couple of crosses from the right cut out but three minutes after the restart the visitors hit the post.

Striker Vadaine Oliver was sent away and hit a shot across Walton from the right of the box which beat the keeper and bounced on to the post and away.

The Blues continued their first-half sloppiness and a minute later Burns gave the ball away in the final third and Woolfenden lost out in a tackle before Edmundson stepped across to clear the danger.

On 50, following Walton’s punch clear from a corner, Robbie McKenzie sent a low ball across the area but too far in front of Oliver.

Town were forced into a change three minutes later when Burns, who had suffered a knock towards the end of the first half, took to the turf for treatment before being swapped for Kyle Edwards, making his first appearance of the McKenna era.

The Gills hit the woodwork for the second time a minute later, Lloyd turning a cross from the left on to the post from the edge of the six-yard box with Walton appearing to get a touch.

Town continued to give the ball away in their own half with their performance becoming scrappier and the crowd audibly more anxious.

Just after the hour mark the game was held up after Lloyd suffered an injury in a challenge with Woolfenden when he looked to have landed awkwardly.

Play continued with the Gills man evidently in pain before the game was brought to a halt for lengthy treatment and the forward was eventually taken down the tunnel on the stretcher cart, Woolfenden having spoken to the grounded former Tranmere player, who was replaced by Charlie Kelman.

Town continued to give the ball away in dangerous areas and on 70 Olly Lee played in Oliver but Edmundson read the pass and got his foot in as the Gills striker shot and his effort looped over the bar.

From the corner, Edwards broke down the left and fed Pigott, who looked to find Chaplin breaking towards the area on the right but his pass was too close to keeper Chapman, who claimed.

But Chaplin didn’t have to wait too much longer for a chance and when it came the former Portsmouth and Barnsley man put the Blues in front.

The ball was stroked to Edmundson in space midway inside the Gills’ half to the left and the centre-half drilled a ball into Chaplin’s feet just inside the area. Despite his first touch not having been the best, the forward then lashed a low shot past Chapman.

It was a goal which had hardly been coming with the Blues’ performance having drifted in the second half but Chaplin once again showed his habit of scoring at important moments, taking his tally for the season to nine.

Bonne replaced Pigott, who was applauded off by the home fans, in the 78th minute, while the visitors swapped Thompson for on-loan Norwich striker Tom Dickson-Peters. Seven minutes later, Chaplin was switched for Bakinson.

Bonne curled a shot high and wide from the edge of the box in the 88th minute from a Bakinson lay-off.

The Blues saw out the final minutes - including eight additional minutes for Lloyd’s injury - without too much danger to claim a hard-fought three points.

Having most of the ball but without creating chances in the first half while giving the ball away all too often, the Blues became even scruffier after the break and were fortunate not to concede when the Gills hit the post twice.

But there was always a chance an opportunity would come and when it did Chaplin showed the clinical finishing which Town fans have become used to this season to claim the three points from a game in which the Blues had been under-par for the most part.

The victory sees Town stay ninth in the League One table but now eight points from the play-offs ahead of Tuesday’s visit to bottom side Doncaster, who won 2-1 at Sunderland today.

Town: Walton, Donacien, Woolfenden, Edmundson (c), Burns (Edwards 54), Evans, Carroll, Thompson, Chaplin (Bakinson 85), Norwood, Pigott (Bonne 78). Unused: Hladky, Burgess, Celina, Jackson.

Gillingham: Chapman, Tutonda, O'Keefe (c), Ehmer (Phillips 90), Tucker, Lee, McKenzie, Masterson, Lloyd (Kelman 68), Oliver, Thompson (Dickson-Peters 78). Unused: Dahlberg, Jackson, Sithole, Maghoma. Referee Stephen Martin (Staffordshire). Att: 20,698 (Gillingham: 486).


Photo: Matchday Images



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1960H added 18:10 - Feb 5
Awful game, awful performance against a poor team, I will take 3 points but improvement needed for the games ahead, most of which could winnable
4

TimmyH added 18:12 - Feb 5
Amazing how all our rivals for the play-offs (if we are a true candidate which is up for debate) are all generally winning currently...give it another month then you'll see the nerves start kicking in and some surprise results. Big 2 away games coming up and we have to start improving on our performances as they're not good enough if we want the points!
4

TimmyH added 18:15 - Feb 5
Aluko I gather was absent due to a family bereavement...to be confirmed.
0

SickParrot added 18:18 - Feb 5
Our two most creative passers of the ball are Aluko and Celina. As Aluko wasn't in the 18 he must be injured or unwell but why did Celina sit on the bench for 96 minutes?
2

Ipswichbusiness added 18:28 - Feb 5
SickParrot: a fair question when you consider that on 85 minutes Chaplin was taken off and replaced by Bakinson. I would have rather seen Celina brought on. I suppose that it was “game management”.
0

istanblue added 18:30 - Feb 5
Result fine, performance unacceptable
0

BlueRuin69 added 18:36 - Feb 5
Has to be said....that boy Chaplin can finish! Coyb
0

RobsonWark added 18:43 - Feb 5
Pigott was worse than useless. Pigott had 78 minutes to stake a claim for a regular place but Bonne's first pass, when he came on, was a bigger contribution to the team than Pigott had contributed in 78 minutes - that's how very, very poor he was!
0

inghamspur added 18:44 - Feb 5
3 words. Boring Biring Boring.
1

RobsonWark added 18:46 - Feb 5
Not a great game to watch but we take the 3 points and move on. Donacien and Burns telepathic thinking wasn't there today. We are definitely missing Morsy.

Walton MOM for me.
0

jas0999 added 18:48 - Feb 5
One of the worst performances at PR - yet for once we won when playing badly! So, overall pleased. A win is a win.
4

ThaiBlue added 18:48 - Feb 5
Dross display,gave so many bad passes away which put pressure on themselves,3pts is what matters i suppose
3

blueboy1981 added 18:49 - Feb 5
We have yet another Manager who certainly makes you wonder about some of his decisions … !!!
The Guy should know more than any of us - but time, results, and progress will prove a point one way, or another on that front.
Some ‘Head Scratchers' again today … !!!
I just hope he is not a PL clone, who tried to be Premiership in Division 3 with his ‘rotational' ideas.
It doesn't work at this level, we know that - the quality isn't there, and the game is different.
3

IpswichT62OldBoy added 19:01 - Feb 5
I think we will beat Sunderland to 6th, they are the exhausted gazelle we should be hunting down.
2

Orraman added 19:02 - Feb 5
@Cloddyseedbed
I appreciate your comments about the injury scenario and I wish the lad all the best and hope it is not a long term injury as probably most of us do.
However it is becoming more and more prevalent especially in this league, to see players drop as if shot after the most innocuous of tackles. While they are having lengthy “treatment” the remainder of the team head to the bench for a tactical update then when the game restarts the “injured party” is immediately flying down the wing or delivering a superb ball.
I don't know if you were at the Oxford or Accrington games but they were by far the worst exponents of this dark art and so long as there is no apparent head injury or obvious serious injury/illness then the game should continue until a suitable break in play occurs.
Obviously this was a genuine injury today but perhaps it's time players thought about the consequences of their cheating because the next time could be them being ignored when they do in fact need treatment. One has to ask is it really cheating or are players just acting as normal in this snowflake generation
8

Cakeman added 19:13 - Feb 5
Dreadful game with little to cheer hence the unusually subdued Portman Road atmosphere.
It looked like most players decided to have an off day together at the same time.
Still it's three points which we should be grateful for.
Gillingham were poor but didn't deserve to lose.
PS I thought it strange that the only player we had on the pitch who did and could score today was subbed with still quite a time left. I can understand why Bakinson was brought on but had Gillingham equalised we probably wouldn't have got another.
Still our managers decisions today commendably got us the points which is what it's all about. On another day though it could have gone horribly wrong as Bakinson is still very much settling in with us.
1

chepstowblue added 19:17 - Feb 5
I don't think that we're the team that others are looking over their shoulders at. The result will always be the most important thing, but the performances have not improved one iota under the new man. 5 ordinary wins against 5 ordinary teams, 2 of them certainly fortuitous. If I'm being honest my expectation levels for a play off push are non existent. But then again Downes has just touched the ball for Swansea, so stranger things have happened.
0

RegencyBlue added 19:33 - Feb 5
We won, that's as good as it gets!

That was as poor as I've seen us for a long time. The first fifteen minutes of the second half I couldn't believe what I was watching it was so bad. We dodged a bullet today and no mistake.

Play like that against Doncaster on Tuesday and I can't see us getting anything from the game. Play like that against MK Dons on Saturday and we will get absolutely mullered!

8

Lukeybluey added 19:35 - Feb 5
Was a weird atmosphere at PR today right from the off I felt. Very muted. Not really an atmosphere at all today apart from edgy anxiousness....was strange....
We didn't play well, but we won! So onto the next one...
3

ArnieM added 19:38 - Feb 5
I hope McKenna is not going to be one of those managers that constantly chops and changes his team! Too much change means uncertainty and poor continuity . Pick the strongest 11 and STICK for a run of games please !!
6

grumpyoldman added 19:41 - Feb 5
Remember those Saturday nights after we played well and lost we were moaning, those Saturdays when we played crap and lost we were on here moaning, now we play badly and win still people on here moaning. Conclusion, a lot of people on here just like moaning. In a near-perfect world, we would play well, score lots of goals and win, we do not live in a near-perfect world so I will take playing badly and winning for now.
6

cat added 19:41 - Feb 5
The positives today were the result, the attendance and the fact we would probably not have one this one earlier in the season. A dour and lifeless display but if we can grab 6 points from the next two then that should put us in the mix. Anything less then we are seriously up against it.
4

Steelmonkey added 19:43 - Feb 5
I was watching the Kidderminster v West Ham game before coming to the game today and must say I was somewhat impressed by their centre half Matt Preston, I really think he could do a job in our back line.
Another poor performance today no midfield and very few attempts on goal.
Pigott looked disjointed and secluded with poor service, and when Burns had to be substituted all attacking options went off with him.
At the moment we don't look like a team that can play together for thirty minutes let alone ninety minutes.
We rode our luck today, how is it that we cannot appoint a manager that can galvanise a group of players together like Neil Harris has done in such a short time, what a good job he has done, Gillingham were more than a match for us today, however, we took the three points so our hopes of reaching the playoffs is still achievable. To play poorly but still win has to be a positive.
3

gosblue added 19:50 - Feb 5
Is it just me or does that feel like a defeat? I felt very flat at the final whistle. I think, like Evans before him, Edmundson is finding the Captain's armband too much of a burden.
5

ringwoodblue added 20:28 - Feb 5
We rode our luck today when they hit the woodwork twice but we snatched a win somehow at the end which is what matters most. It proves that there's no easy games between now and the end of the season.

I think Aluko should come in on Tue if available but I'm not sure who to pick upfront as none of our strikers are looking like scoring.

Hope Burns is not out for too long.
8


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